India’s stubborn attitude against using the umpire decision review system, as well as selecting a team based on sentiment rather than form, could well cost them the first Test match against Australia in Chennai.

Michael Clarke scored his 23rd Test century and put on a partnership of 151 with Moises Henriques to frustrate the Indians after they were reduced to 5/150 at one stage. It could well have been 6/206 had umpire Kumar Dharmasena spotted a huge inside edge off Clarke’s bat when he was on 39.

But once again the Indians had objected to the use of DRS, and Clarke took full advantage as he went on to finish the day unbeaten on 103, taking Australia to an above-par total of 7/316.

At the conclusion of the play Ravichandran Ashwin was asked at the press conference if he thought the DRS would have made a difference. He said, “We could have used it twice before and when it came to Clarke decision no reviews would have been left, so in hindsight we could well be in the same situation.”

Perhaps it will take more than a solitary decision to change the Indian thinking. However if India are in a precarious position tomorrow they might be ruing that chance.

The other facet which greatly benefited Australia was the Indian team selection. It seems even after 100 odd years in the game, the India selectors still believe in handing out matches on basis of personal landmarks.

It becomes even a bigger issue when it comes in the expense of their best spinner, Pragyan Ojha.

The whole benefit of having an extra off-spinner was to make it difficult for the Australian left handed batsmen, but Ashwin later said, “When the wicket is turning and there are footmarks a left arm or right arm spinner can be equally effective.”

The theory was even more puzzling when Ashwin, a few minutes later, contradicted himself, saying, “I would have picked two off-spinners as well.”

On a track tailor-made for spin, dropping Ojha and playing Harbhajan Singh was a bizarre tactic, not that the Australians are complaining.

Indians had been suggesting a four-nil whitewash before the series started. If they continue playing these foolish tactics, the prediction could well be right, but in the Aussies’ favour.

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The Crowd Says (16) | Page of Comments

I would hate to think Indian cricket doesn’t want to use DRS because, there is a sinister side to this. That illegal bookmakers, make a fortune form exotic bets and results, and fuel money into Indian cricket. If that;s the case it’s unfortunate.

Zero sympathy for the Indians. Clarke was out, Australia could have been dusted for 250, and extra 100 runs or so will make a massive difference on this track. What was noticeable was the reluctance of the commentators not to discuss this point, as if they’d been gagged. If so, more BCCI nonsense.

And to Ravi Ashwin… great bowling but, no you wouldn’t have used up two referrals already because you wouldn’t have gambled on using them before this, because you would have only used DRS to reverse an obvious howler, like Clarke’s one was… if you were to use DRS properly that is.

Are players really that stupid? All summer we have seen Clarke, Jayawardne, Sammy, McCullum and Smith gamble on 50/50 referrals and lose, and then not have any up their sleeve for when they needed it. One day perhaps players will start using the system properly, and then we might stop talking about it.

Yeah India really blew the day – dropping a sitter means Warner scored 59 instead of 18, and no DRS means Clarke is 103* instead of out for 39. That plus the dropping of Ojha is just poor. I can’t understand why India is so … apathetic about test matches.

I do seem to recall that in the 1982-83 summer, the then owner on Channel 9, the late Kerry Packer, instructed his commentary team-Richie Benaud, the late Tony Greig, Bill Lawry, Ian Chappell, Frank Tyson-to be very critical of umpires decisions (this was around the time when each country has its own panel of umpires to stand in Tests and ODI matches).

The result was that a couple of umpires quit by season’s end because of the pressure put on them by the media and the reports from each of the 4 captains involved in that summer of cricket-Australia’s Greg Chappell and Kim Hughes, England’s Bob Willis and Geoff Howarth of New Zealand.

It begs the question: is the 2015 World Cup going to be with DRS or without? As it is an ICC-sanctioned tournament, but at the recent meeting the BCCI threatened to pull out of any tour/series that imposed the system, will that mean the ICC will cave and make the World Cup without the decision review system?

Vas, I’ll happily stand corrected, but I thought when the ICC confirmed DRS for the 2011 World Cup, it was also extended it to all ICC events from there on, including WT20s and World Cups. The BCCI voiced its displeasure, but the ICC stood its ground..